| Literature DB >> 28341988 |
Hatsuichi Ohta1, Elżbieta Włodarczyk2, Krzysztof Piaskowski2, Aleksandra Kaleniecka2, Lucyna Lewandowska2, Michał J Baran2, Mariusz Wojnicz2, Kiyokatsu Jinno1, Yoshihiro Saito1, Paweł K Zarzycki3.
Abstract
We report the results of experimental work focusing on host-guest supramolecular complex creation between macrocyclic compound (β-cyclodextrin) and 1-acenaphthenol enantiomers (racemic mixture) in liquid phase composed of 35% acetonitrile in water (v/v) at different temperatures ranging from 0 to 90 °C. Experimental setup involved several analytical protocols based on classical non-forced flow planar chromatography (RP-18 TLC plates), micro-TLC (RP-18 W HPTLC plates), column chromatography (HPLC with C-18 and C-30 stationary phases), as well as UV-Vis spectrophotometry and optical microscopy. It has been found that under various planar chromatographic conditions (stationary plates type, chamber shape and volume, development mode, and saturation) non-typical retention properties (extremely high retention) of 1-acenaphthenol at subambient temperatures can be observed. To our knowledge, reported experimental results are in opposition to currently described retention models based on column chromatographic investigation of host-guest complexes (where in case of strong interaction of given analyte with macrocyclic mobile phases additive, which itself is non strongly retarded by stationary phase-close to the retention of dead volume marker, the retention of target compounds is shortened at low temperatures). To explain this TLC phenomenon that may have in our opinion a number of practical applications, especially for selective high throughput separation involving microchromatographic and/or microfluidic devices as well fractionation and extraction protocols (using, e.g., bar extraction systems), several experiments were conducted focusing on (i) acenaphthenol chromatography under different instrumental conditions, (ii) cyclodextrin retention measured as analyte or mobile phase additive, (iii) plate development time under different mobile phases and temperature settings, (iv) various column chromatographic conditions including C-30 and two C-18 stationary phases, (v) UV-Vis spectrophotometry, and (vi) microscopy inspection of precipitated CD-acenaphthenol crystals. Analysis of collected data has revealed that the most probable reasons for TLC retention behavior of 1-acenaphthenol under β-cyclodextrin additive conditions can be associated with (i) solubility changes of created host-guest complex, (ii) kinetics of solid complex precipitation, and (iii) differences in analysis time between planar and column chromatography. Because precipitation phenomenon may have a massive impact on analytes quantification involving macrocycles as the mobile phase additives, our previously reported data concerning a number of low-molecular compounds (mainly steroids and non steroidal endocrine disrupting chemicals) using HPLC methodology based on binary mobile phases without and with β-cyclodextrin and its hydroxypropyl derivative were re-examined and results discussed. Considering these data and the whole data set reported presently, the enhanced model of chromatographic retention driven by host-guest interaction was proposed.Entities:
Keywords: 1-Acenaphthenol enantiomers; High-performance liquid chromatography; Micro-planar chromatography; Supramolecular interaction; Temperature effects; β-Cyclodextrin
Year: 2017 PMID: 28341988 PMCID: PMC5406416 DOI: 10.1007/s00216-017-0313-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anal Bioanal Chem ISSN: 1618-2642 Impact factor: 4.142
Fig. 1Planar chromatographic behavior of 1-acenaphthenol (racemic mixture) at different temperatures using RP-18 F254S classical TLC plates (a; vertical development) and RP-18 WF254S HPTLC microplates (b; horizontal development), involving plain binary acetonitrile:water mobile phase (1) and modified with β-cyclodextrin additive at concentration of 10 mM (2). Detection: fluorescence (366 nm/Vis). Small arrows indicate the main spots separated
Physicochemical and chromatographic parameters of TLC silica gel 60 RP-18 F254S and HPTLC silica gel 60 RP-18 WF254S glass plates listed in Certificates of Analysis provided by Merck to each plates batch
| Parameter | Specification | Batch values |
|---|---|---|
| A: TLC layer (RP-18 F254S) | ||
| Specific surface area (according to BET; 5-Pt. measurement) [m2 g−1] | 480–540 | 511 |
| Pore volume (N2 isotherm) [mL g−1] | 0.74–0.84 | 0.78 |
| d 50 (laser diffraction, size distribution) [μm] | 9.5–11.5 | 11.4 |
| Layer thickness [μm] | 200–270 | 210 |
| Deviation of layer thickness per plate | ≤35 | 10 |
| Chromatography test (cholesterol elution) [hRF] | 31–43 | 40 |
| B: HPTLC layer (RP-18 WF254S) | ||
| Specific surface area (according to BET; 5-Pt. measurement) [m2 g−1] | 480–540 | 521 |
| Pore volume (N2 isotherm) [mL g−1] | 0.74–0.84 | 0.8 |
| d 50 (laser diffraction, size distribution) [μm] | 5–7 | 6 |
| Layer thickness [μm] | 150–200 | 170 |
| Deviation of layer thickness per plate | ≤35 | 15 |
| Chromatography test (cholesterol elution) [hRF] | 54–66 | 58 |
Fig. 2β-Cyclodextrin chromatographed as analyte (spot position) and mobile phase additive at concentration of 10 mM (β-CD front position) on HPTLC RP-18 WF254S plates at different temperatures using 35% (v/v) acetonitrile in water mobile phase: retention data (a), correlation between two retention modes (b), examples of micro-chromatograms (c), and run time for mobile phase migration at distance of 45 mm (d) measured for plain mobile phase (empty squares) and eluent modified with 10 mM β-CD (black squares)
Fig. 3Separation of acenaphthenol enantiomers under HPLC conditions using β-CD additive to binary mobile phase composed of acetonitrile:water (35:65, v/v) using C-18 (a1) and C-30 (b1) stationary phases (both 15 cm long columns; mobile phase flow 0.5 mL/min) at different temperatures and corresponding peak integration results (a2, b2; peak areas for separated enantiomers were summarized). Graph inserted within plot a2 refers to acenaphthenol peak area data obtained on Supelcosil LC-18 column (10 cm, flow 1 mL/min) without and with β-cyclodextrin additive (labeled as empty circles and black dots, respectively)
Fig. 4UV-Vis detection of crystallization phenomenon observed for 1-acenaphthenol and β-cyclodextrin complex in acetonitrile:water (35:65, v/v) liquid phase (measurement temperature: 20.0 ± 0.1 °C). a Background increase monitored at 350 nm for 1-acenaphthenol at concentration of 10 μg/mL and 10 mM β-CD (UV-Vis spectra presented at top were recorded for given crystallization times: 1, 21, and 90 min.). b Comparison of solid complex creation for different 1-acenaphthenol concentrations 2, 4, and 10 μg/mL using β-cyclodextrin at concentration of 10 mM
Fig. 5Visible light scattering (green laser beam; 532 nm; <10 mW) observed for solid particles of supramolecular complex generated from 1-acenaphthenol (10 μg/mL) and β-cyclodextrin (10 mM) mixture in acetonitrile:water (35:65, v/v), liquid phase, after 3 days at room temperature (22 ± 1 °C) conditions (top) and optical microscope view of precipitated crystals (bottom)